Cape Times

Minister Mboweni says public sector wage agreement is invalid

- SIPHELELE DLUDLA AND SECHABA NKOSI

FINANCE Minister Tito Mboweni has said Covid-19 has rendered the threeyear wage agreement with public sector unions was invalid and unenforcea­ble given vastly changed circumstan­ces.

Mboweni told the Labour Appeals Court in his 33-page heads of argument that the enforcemen­t of a Public Service Co-ordinating Bargaining Council clause in the collective agreement would cost the fiscus R37.8 billion

He said the three-year wage agreement signed in 2018 was non-compliant with a mandatory statutory requiremen­t imposed by law to ensure fiscal affordabil­ity and sustainabi­lity.

“As we have said, in any event, even had there been any tenable contractua­l claim advanced by the applicants, specific performanc­e is to be refused, at the Court's discretion. It does not qualify as just and equitable relief,” Mboweni said.

“Especially not amid Covid-19 conditions; the history of year-on-year increments, outstrippi­ng inflation and outperform­ing private-sector increases.

“This while the rest of the country's workforce have accepted salary cuts or freezes as a consequenc­e of the economic climate and Covid-19 crisis.”

Public service workers unions took the government to court after it reneged on the multi-year wage agreement, saying it was reached without the necessary Regulation 78 and 79 which require Cabinet approval.

The unions yesterday (WED) rejected the last-minute government's proposal to delay the court hearing in a bid to reach an out-of-court settlement.

Public Servants Associatio­n (PSA) attorney Chris Orr said the wage increases set at just over 5 percent would only cost the state R10bn.

“It is a question of some concern that the State has repeatedly relied on a figure in justifying many of its arguments in this matter, which is objectivel­y incorrect,” Orr said.

Advocate William Mokhari SC, representi­ng Nehawu, said the government did not approach unions to renegotiat­e the implementa­tion of the agreement, but simply said the agree

ment was not valid.

“Covid19 didn't find the South African economy in good shape. Covid-19 was merely the final nail in the coffin. One cannot now blame Covid-19 for inability to pay,” Mokhari said.

But Advocate Jeremy Gauntlett SC, representi­ng the National Treasury, argued that section 79 of Public Service

Regulation­s was not complied with as it requires Treasury signing off for the provision of additional funds.

The court battle has big implicatio­ns for South Africa's economic recovery and its efforts to reform public finances.

In October, Mboweni announced that the government will freeze public service wages over the next 3 years to save R160bn.

Mboweni also argued that the government's commitment to cutting public sector wage bill was key to avoiding sovereign debt crisis.

The government now expects gross loan debt to rise to 90.1 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in the fiscal year ending March 2023, up from 63.3 percent this year.

Public sector employee compensati­on has grown by 7.2 percent a year on average over the past five years, well above inflation.

An independen­t study, commission­ed by Business Unity SA (BUSA), found that public sector workers' pay was high compared with both internatio­nal standards and the private sector.

BUSA chief executive Busi Mavuso said that the government, much like business, was going to pivot if it was to stand any chance of staging an economic recovery over the next two to three years.

“That pivot begins with reducing its expenditur­e to better reflect its revenue outlook – in other words facing up to the harsh reality,” Mavuso said.

 ?? Supplied ?? FINANCE Minister Tito Mboweni said that the three-year wage agreement signed in 2018 was not sustainabl­e. |
Supplied FINANCE Minister Tito Mboweni said that the three-year wage agreement signed in 2018 was not sustainabl­e. |

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